(Note: This is mainly motivated by what I observe in the C++ tag - other tags may have different experiences - please share!)
Many times a day we link people to the Minimal, Reproducible Example site. Yet I feel that this frequently misses the mark because "reproducible" is not further explained. Don't get me wrong, from my perspective it's clear what "reproducible" entails, but put yourself in the shoes of a new user:
If you've never tried to reproduce someone else's problem, how do you know what "reproducible" actually means?
In particular, we frequently see people paste a couple lines of code from around the location of an error (or worse, where they think the error is) while lacking the crucial rest of the code that actually provokes the error. I don't recall a single instance of someone adding the missing code when linked to Minimal, Reproducible Example; it always requires explicitly spelling out in comments what they should add. And it doesn't surprise me!
I understand that the page has to be somewhat general to apply to all the kinds of questions that can be asked here, and "reproducible" is the best word to capture that, but that's the only word it ever uses! For a page titled "How to create a Minimal, Reproducible example", it sure doesn't explain "reproducible" at all...
The "Complete" section in particular is where I would expect a more concrete explanation of when you have enough code. But I feel most readers will leave with the wrong impression after reading it. Let's look at it from the perspective of someone who's just been linked here for the first time:
Make sure all information necessary to reproduce the problem is included in the question itself:
Ok, this introductory sentence ends with :
, which tells me I'm about to read a list of things to check.
- If the problem requires some server-side code as well as some XML-based configuration, include code for both. If a web page problem requires HTML, some JavaScript, and a stylesheet, include code for all three. The problem might not be in the code that you think it is in.
I don't have any HTML, JavaScript, XML or server-side stuff. Check.
- Use individual code blocks for each file or snippet you include. Provide a description for the purpose of each block.
I'm only pasting a few lines, so check. (In my experience there is no need for this point - neither formatting nor comments-per-block turn an incomplete example into a complete one - but maybe that experience is different in other tags).
- Use Stack Snippets to include runnable HTML, JavaScript or CSS.
More web stuff. Still not relevant. Check.
- DO NOT use images of code. Copy the actual text from your code editor, paste it into the question, then format it as code. This helps others more easily read and test your code.
Got it, just gonna paste my three lines. Check.
I did all the things listed here, so my example is complete, right?
Unless you're doing web stuff, this entire section contains zero information what "complete" means. It once more says "reproduce" in the first line, that's it.
My primary wish/suggestion would be to add a mention of online compilers. It already talks about runnable HTML/JS/CSS - why limit it to those? There are online compiler services for virtually every language out there. It doesn't have to be phrased as a strict requirement, but something simple and encouraging like (wording is likely improvable)
If your code shows the same problem when put into an online compiler/interpreter, it is guaranteed that everyone else can reproduce the issue. The code itself should still be in the question though!
already gives the reader a hard data point on what meets the threshold of "reproducible".
It might also help to include examples of online compilers (e.g. https://tio.run would be a one-stop shop), but these are probably best recommended per-language. We could refer to the tag wikis (are we sure new users can find those?) or create a list on meta somewhere. Or maybe there are other options, I'm not sure. Either way, this is not essential to the suggestion, but it would surely help.
Possible objections:
"The page is supposed to be concise and not exhaustively complete"
Code is probably the most universal aspect of questions on this site, and the list already contains not one but two items specifically for web technologies."Executing arbitrary code sounds dangerous"
It's certainly safer (for you) to have it executed on some machine in the web than in your own browser..."Should we really endorse individual external projects this way?"
There are several such links on the page already, for JSLint, HTML validation and an R package."Linking to some online compiler from a highly frequented page might overload them..."
Indeed, this has to be done with care and some level of agreement from their end. I don't think linking to TIO and calling it a day is the solution in any case, its interface has a bit of a learning curve (depending on the language).
tio.run
to be there, so do others. Then we add my beautifully reasonable animated gif options, someone else tool for database, another guy tool for machine learning, etc... and it's all started from this topic.